70 Ga. 783 | Ga. | 1883
The only questions in this case necessary to be decided are whether, pending an action of ejectment in which an order to sell in the court of ordinary is a necessary muniment of title and there is no evidence of such an order of record in that court, the party wishing to use such evidence can have a nunc pro tunc order entered without notice to the other side in the ejectment cause, and whether, in such a case, the party not served with notice of the nunc pro tunc order can attack the same as fraudulent in the superior court, on the ground that no such original order to sell ever was had in the ordinary court and the whole proceeding was fraudulent and void.
In the case of Cleghorn vs. Johnson, and vice-versa, 69 Ga., 369, this court ruled, in respect to the establishment of a lost paper, that the usual practice was to establish it instanter, on motion and without notice; but that, where the lost paper is a part of a muniment of title in ejectment pending in another court, and a material link in the chain, the better practice is to give notice of the proceeding to establish the lost paper to the other party in the ejectment. The practice there indicated as proper, we now rule to be necessary ; and rule that an exemplification of such record without notice is not admissible.
The admission of the exemplification of the nunc pro tunc judgment of the court of ordinary,-making a record after the action of ejectment was brought, without notice to the other side opposed to the necessary link of title so made, and which did not exist at the commencement of
Judgment reversed.